At 03:09 PM 12/15/2014, you wrote:
> >
> > This tool reports "fail". No IPV6 connectivity.
> > I thought the whole point of IPV6to4 (or is it IPV4to6) was that ipv4
> > clients could access servers transparently. Afterall, a significant
> > number of client stations in the world are still IPV4.
>
>
> This tool reports "fail". No IPV6 connectivity.
> I thought the whole point of IPV6to4 (or is it IPV4to6) was that ipv4
> clients could access servers transparently. Afterall, a significant
> number of client stations in the world are still IPV4.
>
>
Given the behavior you've described this i
At 07:26 AM 12/15/2014, you wrote:
>On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:41:07AM -0800, david wrote:
> > At 10:27 AM 12/14/2014, you wrote:
> > >On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:20:09AM -0800, david wrote:
> > > > I'm trying to help a friend in Salem attach a Centos6 system to his
> > > > home network. Comcast re
On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:41:07AM -0800, david wrote:
> At 10:27 AM 12/14/2014, you wrote:
> >On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:20:09AM -0800, david wrote:
> > > I'm trying to help a friend in Salem attach a Centos6 system to his
> > > home network. Comcast recently replaced his router with one that
> >
On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 01:35:38PM -0800, Russell Senior wrote:
> I'm not sure where ipv6 comes in here. If the destination box (on the
> friends LAN) has a public ipv6 address, you could get your own ipv6
> network via a Hurricane Electric tunnel for free.
It comes from the original post in thi
> "Russell" == Russell Senior writes:
Russell> I don't know anything about the DCP3939. Can you run tcpdump
Russell> or wireshark on the inside of his network to make sure your
Russell> port forward is working?
This isn't encouraging:
http://forums.comcast.com/t5/Home-Networking-Router-W
> "david" == david writes:
david> [...] I'm not sure what you mean by "going to". Externally, I'm
david> on an IPV4 system, and the router does have an IPV4 address. So,
david> when I try ssh @ipv4-address and when I have port
david> forwarding set for port 22 to an 192.168 (internal IPV4
At 01:06 PM 12/14/2014, you wrote:
>On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:41:07AM -0800, david wrote:
> > At 10:27 AM 12/14/2014, you wrote:
> > Thanks for the prompt response. I'm not sure what you mean by "going
> > to". Externally, I'm on an IPV4 system, and the router does have an
> > IPV4 address. So,
On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:41:07AM -0800, david wrote:
> At 10:27 AM 12/14/2014, you wrote:
> Thanks for the prompt response. I'm not sure what you mean by "going
> to". Externally, I'm on an IPV4 system, and the router does have an
> IPV4 address. So, when I try
> ssh @ipv4-address
> and when
At 10:27 AM 12/14/2014, you wrote:
>On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:20:09AM -0800, david wrote:
> > I'm trying to help a friend in Salem attach a Centos6 system to his
> > home network. Comcast recently replaced his router with one that
> > appears to be implementing their IPV6to4 protocol. It's a DCP
On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 10:20:09AM -0800, david wrote:
> I'm trying to help a friend in Salem attach a Centos6 system to his
> home network. Comcast recently replaced his router with one that
> appears to be implementing their IPV6to4 protocol. It's a DCP3939
> Xfinity router. If anyone has s
Greetings
I'm a newcomer to this list.
I'm trying to help a friend in Salem attach a Centos6 system to his
home network. Comcast recently replaced his router with one that
appears to be implementing their IPV6to4 protocol. It's a DCP3939
Xfinity router. If anyone has successfully installed
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